加拿大的结构性种族灭绝和制度化种族主义:印第安事务部和土著人民的框架

L. Mudde
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引用次数: 2

摘要

这项审查对土著和非土著社区之间的健康和社会经济差距提出了问题,我认为这是由于加拿大政府的作用造成的。具体而言,我分析了加拿大统治下土著行政征服的持续过程,通过应用诊断框架分析作为多学科研究方法来分析人们如何理解情况和活动,揭示加拿大政府对加拿大西部草原省份第一民族政策的内在种族偏好。我的研究结果揭示了在19世纪末和20世纪建立的加拿大行政制度中,第一民族的种族化边缘化是一个持续的当代过程。在揭露第一民族的结构性歧视时,我的研究向读者介绍了政治主叙事或“想象”的概念。这些想象助长了加拿大社会中土著和非土著群体之间的健康和社会经济差距。对这些历史上结构性的政府臆想的批判性分析,以及土著人民中结核病和相关疾病及死亡的间接、指数级高的机会,挑战了真相与和解委员会关于文化种族灭绝的结论。本研究提出,结构性种族灭绝是一个更准确和更具包容性的术语,不仅指印第安事务部(DIA)的案例研究中所见的土著人民,而且指加拿大所有土著人民的持续制度性边缘化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Structural Genocide and Institutionalized Racism in Canada: The Department of Indian Affairs and Framing of Indigenous Peoples
This review problematizes the health and socio-economic disparity between Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities, which I argue is due to the role of the Canadian government. Specifically, I analyse the continuous process of Indigenous administrative subjugation under Canadian rule to uncover the intrinsic racial predilections of Canadian government policy toward First Nations peoples in Canada’s Prairie West provinces through the application of diagnostic frame analysis as a multidisciplinary research method to analyse how people understand situations and activities. My research results reveal the racialized marginalization of First Nation peoples through the administrative regimes in Canada as a continuous contemporary process established in the late nineteenth and twentieth century. In exposing the structural discrimination of First Nations peoples, my research introduces the reader to the concept of political master narratives, or ‘imaginaries’. These imaginaries foster the health and socio-economic disparities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous groups in Canadian society. The critical analysis of these historically structural government instituted imaginaries and the indirect, exponentially higher chances of tuberculosis and related diseases and deaths among Indigenous peoples’ challenge conclusions of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) on cultural genocide. This study proposes structural genocide as a more accurate and inclusive term for the continuous institutional marginalization of not only Indigenous peoples as seen in this case study of the Department of Indian Affairs (DIA) but for all Indigenous peoples in Canada.
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